Breathing Treatments and Appetitefor My 6 M/o Daughter

Updated on April 09, 2008
A.D. asks from Perrysburg, OH
5 answers

My 6 m/o daughter is on breathing treatments (albuterol and pulmicort)again due to a cough. When she was 3 m/o she was diagnosed with the RSV virus and now whenever she gets a cold/flu it goes straight to her lungs and has trouble breathing and starts coughing. This time I have noticed a significant change in her appetite. Before she was only nursing because she was so little but before the treatments started she was eating 3 meals a day consisting of approx. 2 jars of stage 2 and a 5-6 oz. (formula) bottle about an hour after her meal. Now I can hardly get 2 oz total of either food or formula. Her dr. didn't seem worried about it, but it is so dramatic that I was wondering if it is the medicine and I just never new before because she was exclusively nursing. I try to feed her before her treatment as the other way around didn't seem to be working either. Has anyone else noticed this with their child? Does anyone know if the medicine has appetite side effects? Does it change the taste of things? My 2.5 y/o never had any issues like this so this is a totally new area for me.

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S.H.

answers from Cleveland on

my daughter is now three and at 18 months was diagnosed with severe allergies and allergy induced asthma, she has been on breathing treatments for 5 months now (pulmicort) and has the albuteral inhaler and albuteral breathing treatment med. I was told by my daughters specialist the do the pulmicrt daily but to only use the albuteral as needed- inhaler for asthma attacks and the treatment for severe attacks- the albuteral treatment did decrease her app. the few times we had to use it, i don't know if it was a coincidence or because she wasn't feeling well, either way I will only use it as a last resort, but the pulmicrt is fantastic and has no ill effects on her- you should talk to your specialist and not just a ped. if youre concerned.

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K.B.

answers from Cincinnati on

Whenever my son gets sick he simply doesn't eat as much. If he is very sick he normally ends up losing weight. He had bronciolitis as an infant, and also went through cough/flu season on nebulizer treatments because he would WITHOUT a doubt end up with pneumonia. He did eat less. I found feeding after treatments is easier because breathing was easier.

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J.F.

answers from Toledo on

A.,

I agree that her appetite may just be down because she's not feeling well. Or she could even be going through a growth spurt. I know when my kids were getting ready to grow they would eat like crazy, then when they actually started growing, they would almost stop eating all together.

On another note...
My youngest daughter started out the same way yours did. She was hospitalized with RSV at three months and continued on aerosols for a LONG time. We started on the same meds you have, but I was told one thing differently that you may want to check with you pediatrician on. It was always stressed to me by the pediatrician and the pulmonologist (lung Dr.) that regardless if she had any symptoms or not, she needed to continue the Pulmocort treatments on a regular basis (ours was two times a day). Then to use the albuterol as needed for attacks. The reason for this is because the Pulmocort is a corticosteroid which aids the airways in functioning properly, and it also cuts down on the number of "attacks." I'm not sure if this would be the case with your daughter, but it would be worth checking into. Once I realized where I was going wrong and began the proper regimen, we spent much less time taking care of a sick baby.

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S.

answers from Cincinnati on

I work for AstraZeneca, the company that makes Pulmicort. It is a drug that I sell to pediatricians and I have never seen any data showing an affect on appetite. I also call on allergists and pulmonologists who see a huge population of asthma. Pulmicort is used for patients with asthma and I have never heard any complaints from the doctors. I can't speak for the albuterol, but your child should only be using that as needed and doing the pulmicort daily.

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K.N.

answers from Cleveland on

First let me say that she sounds like my middle son, who at age 7 is fine and though he still gets those nasty barking coughs EVERY time he gets sick it's been years since we used his nebulizer. so chances are she will outgrow the worst of this in the next few years and be fine. as for her eating, there's no reason to be concerned, baby's breath through their noses, mouth breathing is something that is actually learned, so when a baby is sick eating is tough. it's terribly hard to suck on a bottle when you can't breathe, and even when we adults are sick we generally don't want to eat much. So unless hse strats dropping wieght i'd just chalk it up to she doens't feel good and try not to worry to much. a baby can not starve themselves, she will eat when she is hungry, jsut be sure that if she is eating less at a time you are offering her food more often. good luck, hopefulyl she gets better soon

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